Institution of Metallurgists explained

The Institution of Metallurgists was a British professional association for metallurgists, largely involved in the iron and steel industry.

History

It was founded in 1945.[1] The inaugural meeting was held on 28 November 1945; the organization was formed by the Iron and Steel Institute and the Institute of Metals.

The International Iron and Steel Institute was formed in 1967, which is now the World Steel Association. by the late 1960s the Institution had around 10,000 metallurgists.

It was involved in the formation of the Association of Professional Scientists and Technologists (APST) in 1971,[2] which was formed as a result of the Industrial Relations Act 1971.

Education

In September 1965, Ordinary National Certificates in science were introduced, in consultation with the Institution, the Royal Institute of Chemistry, the Institute of Physics, the Physical Society, the Institute of Biology, and the Mathematical Association.

In January 1969, these same set of institutions set up the Council of Science and Technology Institutes (CSTI), which ended up as the Science Council in 2003.

Royal Charter

It was given a Royal Charter in 1975. In 1977 it became the sixteenth constituent of the •Council of Engineering Institutions, which became the Engineering Council in 1981.

Merger

It merged with the Metals Society to become Institute of Metals on 1 January 1985.

Structure

In the 1960s it was headquartered at 17 Belgrave Square in the City of Westminster. In the 1970s it moved to Northway House on the A1000 (High Road) in north London.

Registrar-Secretaries

Presidents

Source: The Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.iom3.org/history-institute History of IOM3
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=iRLS1Pz9xJwC&pg=PA145 APST New Scientist